NOVEMBER 22, 2019 – I remember the fall day decades ago. It was just before noon as I walked from my office building—the First National Bank Building in downtown St. Paul—to the St. Paul Athletic Club, where I launched my daily (running) workout. Next to the club was a parking lot, and standing there were …
ESCAPE . . . NORTH
NOVEMBER 21, 2019 – For a November day in Minnesota, yesterday was a “keeper”—mild temperatures (40 – 44F) with periods of sunshine. News from Washington promised to be “hot” with impeachment testimony, but between my schedule and my commitment to seek “treatment” for political addiction, I paid little attention to “breaking news.” In the afternoon, …
JUNKIE IN NEED OF TREETMENT
NOVEMBER 20, 2019 – I apologize, or more precisely, I confess: I am a veritable political junkie; always have been and always will be. I go at it much as my in-laws go at sports. But there’s one big difference: my in-laws are die-hard fans of certain teams, whereas I’m more a fan of the …
PRESIDENTIAL “GREATNESS”
NOVEMBER 19, 2019 – Perhaps you’ve read Theodore Rex by Edmund Morris, acclaimed biography of one of our “greatest” presidents, “greatest” defined as “face chiseled in granite.” Or, as I did last weekend, maybe you’ve watched Ken Burns’ documentary, The Roosevelts. At least you’ve heard of Teddy Roosevelt and even seen his likeness chiseled out …
THE CAP OF A CONSERVATIVE
NOVEMBER 18, 2019 – I wonder what my father, an arch conservative who died in 2010, would’ve thought about Trump. Dad never ever voted for a Democrat. I’m sure he wouldn’t have voted for Hillary in 2016, and I know he would’ve dismissed out of hand, every Democrat seeking the presidency in 2020. However, I …
IN PRAISE OF PUBLIC SERVANTS
NOVEMBER 17, 2019 – In college I had friends who took the foreign service entrance exam—a grueling three-hour written test about every conceivable subject, a personality profile, and an oral exam, not to mention physical and security clearances. I knew people who took both the LSAT and the foreign service exam and reported that the …
CIRCUS TIME (AND OTHER IMAGINGS ON THE RIDE TO SCHOOL) PART II OF II
NOVEMBER 16, 2019 – (Cont.) A few miles further—and a few tunes later on ‘Kool 108,’ the radio station that features hits from the 60s and 70s—the announcer said, “Good morning everyone, to the sound of Kool 108, where all day long, we play all the songs you remember from the 60s and 70s.” An open …
CIRCUS TIME (AND OTHER IMAGININGS ON THE RIDE TO SCHOOL) – PART I OF II
NOVEMBER 15, 2019 – Blogger’s Note: For several years quite awhile ago, my sisters, mother, nieces and I wrote daily stories on an online family bulletin board. By the end of our experiment, we’d accumulated thousands of pages of material. Here, in two parts is an entry I posted describing a ride to school one day …
FRUIT FOR THOUGHT
NOVEMBER 15, 2019 – Let’s understand: impeachment and trial are political procedures conducted according to rules set by the House (impeachment) and Senate (trial). Impeachment/removal proceedings are not legal proceedings subject to the Federal Rules of Evidence, which render hearsay testimony inadmissible (subject to certain exceptions) . . . and to the Rules of Civil/Criminal …
DRIVING WITH FOG LIGHTS (AND HISTORY IN THE REARVIEW MIRROR)
NOVEMBER 13, 2019 – My friends who support Trump offer the following reasons: Tax cuts; Deregulation; Court appointees; Attempted invasion by illegal immigrants; Democrats are so corrupt. Among my Trumpster friends, their pick of the foregoing reasons outweighs Trump’s “unlikability.” Meanwhile, friends who share my disdain for Trump struggle to explain his support. The most …
“YESTERDAY, [THE GREAT WAR] SEEMED SO FAR AWAY . . .”
NOVEMBER 12, 2019 – Yesterday was “Veteran’s Day,” because Armistice Day was “so far away.” And yesterday, World War I was on my mind, since my grandfather Nilsson was a veteran of The Great War, which ended on Armistice Day—officially, at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month—a long, long time …
REMEMBERING
NOVEMBER 11, 2019 – Among my treasures is my memory of my mom-in-law, Cleo Boger, who would’ve turned 99 today had she lived another three years. She was born the same year as the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote. Cleo lived just long enough to vote for a woman candidate for …
UNCHARTED
NOVEMBER 10, 2019 – I’m angered, saddened, humored, flummoxed, flabbergasted, and fascinated by Facebook. To roil me further, someone reminded me recently that “What you see on Facebook is not the same as what I see on Facebook.” Compared to most active FB users, I don’t have a lot of friends (383, according to FB, …
ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE
NOVEMBER 9, 2019 – With every new business client, I like to elicit background information. It facilitates rapport, and rapport gives me greater broader, deeper insight into the client’s needs, concerns, flexibility, and level of sophistication—so I can calibrate my communication accordingly. Plus, I’m curious about what makes people tick. Everyone has a story, and …
A “MIDWEST MODEST” PROPOSAL
NOVEMBER 8, 2019 – As to all things Ukraine . . . the country fractures thusly: One-third (“First Estate”), knows facts and truth, panics; One-third (“Second Estate”) knows better, denies; One-third (“Third Estate”) knows nothing, cares little. However likely impeachment, conviction is equally unlikely. It will be Trump vs. [Democrat] in 2020. As it turns …
MOONLIGHT MYOPIA
NOVEMBER 7, 2019 – I’m lucky to have traveled round the globe, literally, crisscrossing oceans, continents, the equator, the Arctic Circle, the Tropic of Cancer, the Tropic of Capricorn. Whenever possible I’ve looked out the window of car, train, ship, and plane. On foot, bike or skis, I’ve peered as far and wide as I …
POWER
NOVEMBER 6, 2019 – Each of us is born with a hard-wired power unit that lights up ambition and aspiration and powers all plans and actions. The power runs constantly, fueled by will, wind, or whim, depending on individual disposition, experience, and circumstance. Evolution gave us the power unit for survival. In most of us, …
DRIVING WITHOUT BACH, BEATLES OR CHIPS
NOVEMBER 5, 2019 – Despite urban “combat driving conditions,” it was in the country where Sunday evening I experienced two close calls. In each case, reflex avoided a high-impact collision. Both incidents left me wondering whether the total absence of distractions was a deciding factor. The first occurred on US Highway 8 across rural western …
CIVILIZED
Blogger’s Note: Of 182 posts to date, this is the first to exceed the self-imposed cap of 500 words. It will remain the exception. In the writer’s opinion, slavish adherence to the rule, even via serialization, would detract from the story. NOVEMBER 4, 2019 – This past weekend up at the Red Cabin, I sifted …
POLITICS AND ECONOMICS (SOMEWHAT SIMPLIFIED)
NOVEMBER 3, 3019 – Recently on Facebook I saw a Barron’s post recommending recession-proof stocks. Lots of comments followed, many by “investors” with nasty, hyperbolic attitudes toward Elizabeth Warren. Take this one, for example: Has anybody listened to one word Pocahontas [sic] has said about what she wants to do to our economy? No stock …
INTERNATIONAL BANKING (OR “WHY TO BE BULLISH ON AMERICA”)
NOVEMBER 2, 2019 – I’ve long believed that some banks are too big to succeed. But that’s another story. This post is about three young, street-level (technically, skyway level) bank employees who should be running the outfit. Someday they will. They are Lance, Desilo, and Mohammed. This past week they went to town on my …
THE COST OF IMPATIENCE: A FLOOD OF SEWAGE
NOVEMBER 1, 2019 – Yesterday, in his column, The Point, CNN commentator Chris Cillizza explained Trump’s support. Cillizza boiled it down to the attitude, “I’m fed up with the [corrupt, do-nothing but ignore me] government and won’t take it anymore!” Trump played on that in 2016 and will hammer at it for re-election. Cillizza cited …
THE FACTS, THE LAW AND . . . THE CHECKERED FLAG
OCTOBER 31, 2019 – Every legal case has two parts—facts and law. Sometimes the facts are in the bag: the other side is blind, deaf, and dumb regarding the facts OR both sides stipulate to the facts. The case then turns on the law—given irrefutable or stipulated facts, how should the law be applied? From …
LEAVE THEM ALONE
OCTOBER 30, 2019 – Yesterday after work-work, I worked raking leaves in our yard. In Minnesota, raking leaves means you’ll soon be shoveling snow. I thought about that as I raked a billion maple leaves into a gigantic pile. Dry, crinkly leaves are a piece of pumpkin pie when compared to shoveling snow onto four-foot-high …
IMPEACHMENT FACE-OFF
OCTOBER 29, 2019 – ME: I propose a ground rule: I won’t use the word “ass”; you won’t use the words, “sham” and “witch hunt.” Deal? REPUBLICAN: Deal. You go first. ME: Impeachment contemplated by the Constitution is an extraordinary remedy to be applied only when the president has committed a seriously wrong act—a high …